Documenti di Didattica
Documenti di Professioni
Documenti di Cultura
Note: The formatting of this document has been reworked in Windows Notepad
text editor, so that
the tabs display into collumns properly
Also note that, in the book, data values seemed to have been placed in the
wrong cells in
the tables / spreadsheet that was in my copy- 1995 Copyright, 10th
printing. I've tried to
move the data to the apropriate places as well as possible now. Much of
this data was
scanned, run through an OCR program, then reformatted.
My sincere thanks to Hulda Clark for giving permission in her book to pass
on this information!
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Re-edited December 20th, 1998
Editor's Note: three extra frequencies have been added into this list, with
a " ** "in front of the
entry, for the "Adenovirus"; recently, some cold- like symptoms are being
found to not be
responsive to use of the 393KHz, which has so often done the job in the
past. These are added
into this list as other possible experimental frequencies.
When these primary CLARK frequencies are known, it may be most effective to
work with a
device capable of generating these frequencies *AS A PULSED DC SQUARE WAVE*
with a waveform
rise time of 100nS or faster for optimum effect, according to many
researchers. The Zapper
HFA-4AV and HFA-4AVR models have a 75nS rise time on the output waveform,
and can generate
frequencies from below 8 Hz to typically 1.3+ MHz, with an adjustable
outputvoltage amplitude
of from 5 volts to 14 volts. This may be the only device available in any
price range that has
this capability, especially in a portable rechargable format.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
HULDA CLARK'S FREQUENCIES
Mold, Mold Toxin Frequencies
Slime Molds KHz
Agyfla 81
Lycogala 126
Stemonius 211
Acanthocephala
Anaplasma marginale 386.4 388.0 387
Anaplasma rnarginale (2nd range) 415.3 424 422
Ancylostoma braziliense (adult) 397.6 403.25
401
Ancylostoma caninum 383.1 402.9 400,
393, 386
Ancylostoma duodenale male
Anguillula aceti
Ascaris larvae in lung 404.9 409.15
408
common roundworm of cats and dogs
Ascaris lumbricoides (m and f) same
Ascaris megalocephala (male) 403.85 409.7 408
Babesia bigemina
Babesia canis smear
Balantidium coli cysts 458.8 462.9 460
Balantidium sp. trophozoites (from
guinea pig) parasitic ciliate
Besnoitia (lung sect.) protozoan 352.8 361.4
358
Capillaria hepatica (liver sect) 424.25 430.65
428
Chilomastix cysts (rat) 388.95 390.7 389
ChiIomastix cysts (rat) (2nd range) 425.2 427.3 426
Chilomastix mesnili (trophozoites) same
Chilomonas, whole mount 393.75 400 398
Clinostomum metacercaria
Clonorchis metacercariae
Clonorcnis sinensis 425.7 428.75 427
Clonorchis sinensis eggs
Cryptocotyle lingua (adult) 409.95 416.0
414
Didinium
Dientamoeba fragilis 401.35 406.05
404
Dipetalonema perstans (microfilaria
human blood)
Dirofilaria immitis dog heartworm 408.15 411.15
409
Echinoporyphium recurvatum 418.55 423.9 421
Echinostoma revolutum 425.5 429.65 428
Eimeria stiedac
Eimeria tenella
Endamoeba gingivalis trophozoite 433.8 441.0
438
Endolimax nana trophozoites and cysts 394.25 397.1
396
Endolimax nana trophozoites and cysts 430.5 433.35
432
(2nd range)
Entamoeba coil cysts
Entamoeba coil trophozoites 397.0 400.35
396
Sarcina lutea
Sarcocystis 450.55 454.95 452
Schistosoma haematobium 473 473 473
Schistosoma japonicum eggs
Schistosoma mansoni 353 353 353
Stephanurus dentalus (ova) 467.35 463.1
461
Stigeoclonium 404.25 415.25 412,
407
Strongyloides (filariform larva) 398.4 402.0
400
Strongyloides parasitic females
Toxocara (eggs)
Toxoplasma (human strain) 395.0 395.0
395
Trichinella spiralis (muscle) 403.85 405.57
404.5
Trichomonas muris
Trichomonas vaginalis 378.0 383.6 381
Trichuris sp. (male) 388.3 408.9
406
Trypanosoma brucel 423.2 431.4 429
Trypanosoma cruzi (brain tissue) 460.2 465.65
463
Trypanosoma equiperdum 434.6 451.25 443.
442, 436
Trypanosoma gambiense 393.75 393-7 396
Trypanosoma lewisi (blood smear) 424.5 426.0
425
Trypanosoma rhodesiense 423.5 423.55 426
Urocleidus 442.35 450.0 447
Tapeworms
Tapeworms are segmented. The first segment is the head, called the
scolex. Tapeworms
grow by adding a new segment to their body.
Tapeworms can have very large bandwidths (range of frequencies), and
it varies by the
length of the specimen! It is as if each new segment has a unique, and
slightly lower, frequency.
Do not use a frequency generator to kill tapeworms. If you
accidentally kill middle segments
instead of working your way up from the bottom, you may conceivably ~rom0te
dispersion! Use only
a zapper. (Editor's Note: By this, Hulda means to use only a device
producing a pulsed DC square
wave output.)
MITE FREQUENCIES :These are the organisms that cold viruses ride in with!
Miscellaneous Frequencies
NOTE: The previous frequency table data is reproduced from Hulda Regehr
Clark,
Ph.D., N.D.'s Book, "THE CURE FOR ALL DISEASES", Copyright 1995, and are
included for
free for your information.
On the title page of this book, just inside the front cover, is the
following: